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IBER
—
PAGE THREE
Trojans Cover Goldwater, Foreign Students
VOL. Lll
Univers'rty o-f
DAI LY
Southern Call-formic.
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Indian Scalping to Follow Washington Clash
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1961
NO. 35
FIVE FAIR LADIES
Judicial Slaps Two Houses With Charter Probations
Old' Hobbies Senior Dance Dooley S Pilot Calm Anxiety/0 AiC^ Fm<^
Expert Says
FINAL FIVE—The five USC coeds to survive two weeks of eliminations for the Helen of Troy crown are saving their prettiest smiles for the finals tomorrow
Daily Trojan Photo by Frank L. Kaplan
night. But one look is enough to see why (l-r) Carolee Ream, Faye Henderson, Linda Petri, Margarethe Bertelson and Mary Westover outlasted 79 other entries.
Deans Cast Cautious Eye At Three-Semester Year
(Editor’s Note: This is the fourth in a series of articles o n trimester and related plans.)
By KEN INOUYE Managing Editor
Conditional approval of the trimester plan, which the university is currently studying, was expressed by three deans recently.
Trimester, as adopted by the University cf Pittsburgh, would mean scrapping the traditional four - year, two semester educational process for a shorter three - term per year program. Each term would be 15 weeks.
Deans Alfred C. Ingersoll, Paul E. Hadley and Neil D. Warren each acknowledged the
Two Medics To Receive Honor Bids
Two members of the School of Medicine faculty have been designated Salerru^ Collegium he said
New Aspect
advantages of thj plan, but also pointed out some of the inherent shortcomings.
Dr. Ingersoll, dean of fie School of Engineering, said he was ‘’reasonably enthusiastic” about the trimester plan.
“I’m in favor of trimester on a trial basis,” Dr. Ingersoll said. “One of the most helpful features, from the standpoint of engineering majors, is to give the already mature student who has a background *« chance to go full steam ahead and graduate earlier,” he said.
Some Favor
“A friend of mine who is in the industry favors the trimester plan,” he said. However, he added that industry is not necessarily aware of some of the educational problems that educators recognize.
“We have a program row that we feel turns out mature students. I am not in favor of taking a student fresh out of high school and rushing him through school and at the age of 19 or 20 have him enter the profession with a diploma In
graduate study by offering
more classes throughout the year.
Students will be able to graduate in two and two-thirds calendar years. To do so, they must enroll in each term.
Faculty members will be able to augment their salaries by as much as 30 per cent by teaching the third term. However, Dr. Warren said the faculty will not be encouraged to teach three consecutive terms year in and year out.
The university wou’d beabte
to minimize the use of existing facilities and eliminate the non - productive periois. Tui tion income would be Increased by 50 per cent. It now only pays 40 per cent of total costis.
professors, the medical school support group announced yesterday.
They are Dr. Paul F. Wehrla,
Another consideration is that faculty members usually attend conferences and meetings professor of infectious diseases which are sponsored by national pediatrics, and Dr. Theo- al to upgrade
dore Kurze, associate prcfes- themselves. with trimester sor of neurosurgery. I1hey may nQt have the oppor_
Salemi Collegium, whose 515 |tunity to attend these meet-members give $100 each per ings, he said.
year to support the teaching; Dr. Hadley, dean of the sum-and research program of the |mer session( fejt the
School of Medicine, will honor present summer schedule was
Law Institute To Analyze Tax System
Drs. Wehrle and Kurze at the group’s third annual formal dinner at the Ambassador Hotel Nov. 10.
Feature Speaker Arizona Sen Barry Goldwater will speak at the banquet, which will be chaired by Dr. Howard P .House.
Dr. Wehrle, who is also head of pediatrics at Les Angeles County Hospital, came to USC frcm the Upstate Medical Center of the State University of New York in Syracuse, where he was associate professor of pediatrics and chairman of the department of microbiology.
He is a graduate of the Uni- i versitv of Arizona and Tulane University School of Medicine.
Long Career Dr. Kurze has been a member of the USC clinical faculty In neurosurgery since 1954. He was graduated from Washington College, Md., in 1943. and the Dong Island College of Medicine in 1947. His internship was at St. Monica’s Hospital in Phoenix and his residency in neurosurgery was at the Los Angeles Veterans Administration Hospital and the
adequate, but that he favored trimester on one condition:
“If trimester will make it possible fcr the university to accommodate more highly, qualified students then I'm in favor of it.” he said.
Dr. Warren, dean of LAS. said the adoption of trimester could result in some of the following advantages:
It will reduce the total length of undergraduate and
Trolios Acts To Practice
Ail participants in Trolios must meet in Bovard Auditorium at 5:45 tonight and tomorrow night for preliminary staging, lighting and timing rehearsals, Gene Mikov, Trolios chairman, said.
The seven acts, to be presented Wednesday night at the annual vaudeville performance, must be present at both rehearsals to be eligible to compete at Trolios, he said.
This vear there will be two
A critical analysis of the tax program of the Kennedy administration and the practical aspects of incorporating and doing business abroad will be discussed at the 14th annual Institute on Federal Taxation sponsored by the School of Law Wednesday to Friday.
"Tax Trends Along the New Frontier” will be the subject of a lecture by Adrian A. Kra-gen, vice chancellor, and Shannon Cecil Turner, professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley.
Timely Lecture
With the Kennedy administration proposing changes in taxes or administration of the laws in such areas as capital gains, depreciation, travel and administration expense and withholding and tax credits, Professor Kragen’s lecture will be particularly timely, Louis M. Brown, director of the USC tax institute, said.
Mortimer M. Caplin, U. S. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and Bernard H. Fisch-grund, chief of the excise tax branch, will both address the more than 500 attorneys, accountants and life insurance underwriters expected to attend the USC institute in Bovard Auditorium.
mixed division entrants, two Los Angeles County General j women's groups and three Hospital. . men's division contenders.
There's not much difference psychologically between t h e comfort a child gets from carrying around h i s favorite blanket and the satisfaction a man achieves from playing around with an antique auto.
Both, in the studied opinion of USC psychologist Chfytor Mason, are a search for ideal life fulfillment. The blanket is necessary to the child, often after he is presumed to have “outgrown” it, Mason says. And, particularly in these uncertain times, the antique car may be just as necessary to the man.
“The man who spends his spare time restoring a Model-A rumble-seat roadster is turning away from the pressures of the present and the fears of the future for a page from a pleasant past he knew or wished for in boyhood." psychologist Mason says. “The parallel between man and car, child and blanket, is strongly evident.” Probing Good
Antique car lovers aren’t the only ones who fit into this framework, the psychologist attests. So do Civil War buffs, model train builders and people who collect old telephones.
“Even the volent glories of the American Civil War can be more of a comfort than contemplating the destruction of a 50-megaton K-bomb,” he explains.
“This probing into the past isn’t just an academic fascination with history,” he continues. “The rather remarkable and significant thing is that men are the chief probers. Although women long have had an interest in antiques, never before in American history have men turned en masse toward the
past while making such a big noise about the future.”
New Trend
“We didn’t see this thing generally after the Civil War, or even after World War I. But it began to evidence itself strongly in the days following World War II,” he notes. “It’s a kind of a sad desperation, when you consider it closely.”
The psychologist admits his own interest in the past. He puts buildings he knew as a boy into the model train layouts he now builds. Some of them are big bulidings, like hotels and office buildings he remembers. Others are houses, or the comer grocery or drug store.
Real Causes
Leisure time and a general affluence have helped adults “play with the past,” says the faculty member. “But these things are merely a means to an end. They are not the cause of this phenomenon,” he feels.
“The reason an astro-scien-tist collects old circus posters and a banker suddenly blossoms as an authority on Amer ican railroading is because they’re pressured by the pres ent and fearful of the future,” Mason adds. “Sooner or later they find that they must get off the whirling merry-go-round and plant their feet—if only momentarily — on ground with which they are thoroughly familiar.
The Senior Ciass Council will give a boost to the Master Plan fund tonight when they host their class members at a “Meet Me at Julie’s” party from 8 to 11.
The class council has asked that profits from the so-c'al event, which will come from a 10-cent price increase on refreshments, be donated toward the construction of a new Student Union building or for improvements on the present structure, Gary Elder, class president, said.
Will Continue Medic's Plan
By DEBORAH BLUM
An ambitious USC international relations student is attempting to continue the wcrk of Dr. Tem Dooley, the med-
Noon Reader' Discuss World Doom
A ring with the power to corrupt the world is the central image in the work which will be read by Dr. Allen Cas-son, assistant professor of English, at today’s Noon Reading at 12:30 in 133 FH.
“The Lord of the Rings” by J. R. R. Tolkien describes how forces of evil try to retreive the ring from the good forces, Dr. Casson said.
Three Volumes
The book is an adventure-fairy story written in three volumes, but it is not a children’s book. Children would enjoy it, although it would probably give them nightmares, he commented.
The prose fiction work is much closer in tone and style to the epic or heroic romance than it is to the modem novel, he said.
After the book was published, a Time magazine reviewer commented that it was an allegory about atomic enery, Dr. Casson said. Although he does not agree with the review, he says that the book certainly invites allegorical interprets, tion.
Oxford Professor
Tolkien, a professor at Oxford University, is an internationally known Old- and Mid-dle-English scholar, Dr. Casson said. Besides “The Lord of the Rings,” the British writer has also published ‘‘The Hobbit.” “The Hobbit,” a children’s book, is something of an established classic in the manner of ‘Winnie the Pooh,” he said. ‘The Lord of the Rings,” published in 1954 and 1955, is a sequel to “The Hobbit.”
Dr. Harold E. Briggs, English professor, will read Old English ballads at the next noon reading.
New Dean Starts Work
Questions Covered Twenty-five lecturers will
Harvard graduate Samuel T. Hurst begins his first day today as dean of the USC School of Architecture.
He and Mrs. Hurst were welcomed Friday evening by the speak during the three days on j architecture faculty at a din such questions as California ■ ner that also honored Prof. corporation taxes, profit shar-; Henry C. Burge, acting dean
ing plans, estate planning, how to acquire a corporation without cash, personal holdings companies, real estate investment trust, contributions to colleges and acquisitions made to evade or avoid income tax.
of the school for the past year Dean Hurst was appointed last July by President Topping He replaces Arthur B. Gallion who was dean from 1954 to 1960 before going to work in Hawaii,
ical missionary who tried to -^p vvere removed by the Judi
Riot Penalties Hit TEPs, SAMMIES
By RICK BUTLER
Tau Epsilon Phi and Sigma Alph^, Mu fraternities were placed on charter probation by IFC Judicial Friday for their part in the Halloween rioting on the Row last Tuesday.
TEP was put on probation for one year and SAM for the remainder cf this se-mester at a seven-hour, two-day \ session. All major officers ofj
aid the people of Southeast Asia before his death in 1960.
Ted Werner, one of the organizers of the new Dr. Tom Dooley Foundation (incorporated in California), said that he plans to raise funds for the continued operation of the medical stations in Asia which were established by Dr. Dcoley.
New Idea
Africa Group To Be Feted At Reception
cial ruling.
If either house is involved in another complaint during its probationary period it will automatically lose its national charter and will have to leave the IFC as a recognized frater- * African students at colleges nity. and universities in Greater Los
Judicial ruled that the presi- An?eles will be guests of the dent, vice president, pledge African Scholarship Assn. at a class president and alumni ad- reception next Friday evening
Dr. Doole> s idea in estab- vi£ej. Qf th h . at 8 in Town and Gown
medical stationsi4, . „. , 6 * . ^
their offices for the house's part The reception, designed to
clinics in which the natives!” the"iot « SAM '<■* Tues- bring foreign students and resi-
could take over after the <loe-’day t Th' . offK"s musl relm' dc"ts ^ An^'« together.
quish their positions by Nov. will be open to the public.
lishin
throughout Asia was to set up in
tor had left.
Werner was Dr. Dooley’s pilot from July, 1960, until the doctor’s death.
Some people have criticized Dr. Dooley fc>r using these primitive-type hospitals rather than modern ones with all the new equipment. But, as Werner said, “something is better than nothing, and the natives have to be able to slip into the work of the hospital easily.”
Werner hopes to establish new chapters for the foundation and to eventually have chapters on the various college campuses—including USC.
Own Projects
“Chapters, would be given projects where they could sup^ port something for one' of the hospitals,” he explained. “For example, they could collect clothes for the orphanage in Viet-Nam, or, as one college did, wrap bandages for the hospitals each month.
“The primary purpose of the foundation is to carry out the promises Dr. Dooley made,” Werner noted. Among these promises was establishment of a mobile van unit to aid Tibetan refugees who are coming into Northern India.
Far from the jungles now, Werner is taking international relations to broaden his view of the world situation. In June he will return to Southeast Asia to see what has happened since he left last September.
Chance Meet
Werner's invitation into this realm of excitement and adventure took place when he and Dr. Dooley met through a mutual friend of both families, who happened to be dean of the medical school where Dr. Dooley was enrolled.
In July, 1960, when Werner (Continued on Page 2)
11. ! “Los Angeles today has a
Long Wait worldwide reputation as a can-
The probation levied against ter for training African stu-TEP will be subject to review dents,” Viets S. Logue. foreign after fall rush next year. The student counselor, said, house was also placed on rush The African student colony probation for the spring semes- *n Angeles has several uniter. qiie distinctions, he noted. The
While on rush probation, the onl-v Morrocan student5 111 th« TEPs Will not be able to have United States today’ for a pledge class or hold rush stance' are enrolJed at USC functions with university permission.
Judicial also ruled that the executive bodies of both houses must meet jointly every two
Ministry Level
Festus Higiro from Ruanda-Urundi is the only student in
the United States for the small
United Nations trustee terri-
weeks, with meetings to be held r** He is comPletinS work l<*
alternately in each house. Both
a bachelor’s degree at USC.
alumni advisers will have to
be present at the meetings, and a progress report of each meet-,
ing will have to be filed with char^ of education of their
people when they return to
The 19 Congolese educators now enrolled here will be at the Ministry level and in
IFC.
New Relations
“These meetings are to continue into the future until it is felt that cordial relations have been reestablished between the two houses,” the Judicial decision read.
Each house will also be required to hire an independent adjuster to determine the extent of damages from the riot, which involved an estimated 400 men and lasted more than six hours. Judicial will determine the extent of damages
their country, Logue remarked.
Principal speaker at the reception will he Dr. Wendell Jones, program director for the Peace Corps Training Center at UCLA. He will speak on “The Progress of African Education in the Futuere.”
Determined Students The ASA is headed this year by Ed Clinton of Clifton Cafeterias who will appear on the program with Dr. Jones and Robert Feiner. ASA's executive committee member.
' The ASA and the many in-
to be paid on the basis of these stitutions where African stu
reports.
“Judicial felt
the situation
dents are enrolled can testify to the determination these
must be remedied in such a young people exhibit in working for their degrees,” Counselor Logue said.
“Although only in its beginning years, the African Scholarship Association has provided considerable assistance to many of these students and now anti-
way as to establish good relations between the two fraternities and to act as a safeguard against future deterioration between houses on the Row,” IFC Adviser Frank Joyce said.
Dean of Students Robert J. cipates this opportunity to get Downey told IFC that frater- them together with members nities have their last foothold of the community in which they on the West Coast at USC. I live and syudy,” he declared.
Asians to Get Volumes of Laughs, Smatterings of USC Eating Habits
By SUE BERNARD
Asian students benefiting from the Books for Asian Students drive will also get a liberal sprinkling of American culture from the traces of mustard, coffee and pressed butterflies scattered throughout the books.
Don Benjamin, chairman of the drive, said that some of the books the committee has collected may not' actually help the Asian students, but they have at least provided him and his staff with “lots of laughs.’’
The drive, sponsored by the ASSC Greater University Committee, will continue until Wednesday.
“Some of the books must have been used as place mats,” Benjamin said. “At least Asian students will get an idea of our eating habits.”
Some of the books that have been donated have surprised, shocked and amused the com mittee members. In addition to a great number of books of
the “Tropic of Cancer” and
“Peyton Place’’ type, there is one titled “Gorilla — Tracking and Capturing the Ape Mein of Africa.”
“Somebody even gave us a copy of Karl Marx’s ‘Das Kap-ital,’ but we're debating whether or not to include it,” Benjamin, commented.
Ironically, at least four copies of “The Ugly American” have been donated to the program, which is designed to erase that image in Asia.
Sigma Alpha Mu donated some books ruined in last Tuesday's Row riot, Benjamin said.
Zeta Beta Tau donated approximately 20 books to the drive, but on one condition: that the committee members dig them out of the ZBT basement themselves, a committee member reported.
“Their basement was laby-rinthian and pitch black — the perfect place for a horror
movie,” she said. “With sheer nerve and loads of matches, we finally got them all, but
we lost 10 years of our lives.”
STRANGEST PLACES-Book Drive Chairman Don Benjamin (kneeling) uncovers cache of old books in ZBT basement with Karen SchneMer and Steve Silverman. The committee has gone to unusual ends to get donations.

IBER
—
PAGE THREE
Trojans Cover Goldwater, Foreign Students
VOL. Lll
Univers'rty o-f
DAI LY
Southern Call-formic.
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Indian Scalping to Follow Washington Clash
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1961
NO. 35
FIVE FAIR LADIES
Judicial Slaps Two Houses With Charter Probations
Old' Hobbies Senior Dance Dooley S Pilot Calm Anxiety/0 AiC^ Fm s idea in estab- vi£ej. Qf th h . at 8 in Town and Gown
medical stationsi4, . „. , 6 * . ^
their offices for the house's part The reception, designed to
clinics in which the natives!” the"iot « SAM 'r using these primitive-type hospitals rather than modern ones with all the new equipment. But, as Werner said, “something is better than nothing, and the natives have to be able to slip into the work of the hospital easily.”
Werner hopes to establish new chapters for the foundation and to eventually have chapters on the various college campuses—including USC.
Own Projects
“Chapters, would be given projects where they could sup^ port something for one' of the hospitals,” he explained. “For example, they could collect clothes for the orphanage in Viet-Nam, or, as one college did, wrap bandages for the hospitals each month.
“The primary purpose of the foundation is to carry out the promises Dr. Dooley made,” Werner noted. Among these promises was establishment of a mobile van unit to aid Tibetan refugees who are coming into Northern India.
Far from the jungles now, Werner is taking international relations to broaden his view of the world situation. In June he will return to Southeast Asia to see what has happened since he left last September.
Chance Meet
Werner's invitation into this realm of excitement and adventure took place when he and Dr. Dooley met through a mutual friend of both families, who happened to be dean of the medical school where Dr. Dooley was enrolled.
In July, 1960, when Werner (Continued on Page 2)
11. ! “Los Angeles today has a
Long Wait worldwide reputation as a can-
The probation levied against ter for training African stu-TEP will be subject to review dents,” Viets S. Logue. foreign after fall rush next year. The student counselor, said, house was also placed on rush The African student colony probation for the spring semes- *n Angeles has several uniter. qiie distinctions, he noted. The
While on rush probation, the onl-v Morrocan student5 111 th« TEPs Will not be able to have United States today’ for a pledge class or hold rush stance' are enrolJed at USC functions with university permission.
Judicial also ruled that the executive bodies of both houses must meet jointly every two
Ministry Level
Festus Higiro from Ruanda-Urundi is the only student in
the United States for the small
United Nations trustee terri-
weeks, with meetings to be held r** He is comPletinS work l